HomeNewsBusinessEconomyDrought to cut India's summer-sown corn output by 15%

Drought to cut India's summer-sown corn output by 15%

Lower output in the main exporter of corn to Southeast Asia, at a time when the world is flush with Latin American and US supplies, should help underpin global prices of the grain that recently hit a 10-month low of USD 3.46-1/2 per bushel.

September 15, 2015 / 08:16 IST
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India's summer-sown corn output is likely to drop more than 15 percent this year as the first back-to-back drought in three decades wilts crops and forces farmers to let land lie fallow, trade and industry officials said.

Lower output in the main exporter of corn to Southeast Asia, at a time when the world is flush with Latin American and US supplies, should help underpin global prices of the grain that recently hit a 10-month low of USD 3.46-1/2 per bushel.

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"The (Indian corn) crop looks reasonably lower despite a few spells of rains that have been too little, too late to avert a drought," Amit Sachdev, India representative of the US Grains Council, told Reuters on Monday.

Rains are crucial for agriculture in India, where more than half the farmland lacks irrigation facilities. But this year, rainfall over the four-month monsoon season that started in June has been 16 percent below average.